http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/21/world/europe/21ireland.html?em
If it happened, it's horrific. Criminal.
But look again at the article. We find that:
Say people in Italy, Germany, Korea, Japan, etc. claimed that U.S. soldiers abused them as civilians 50, 60, and 70 years ago.
Say the accused were long dead; written records were either unobtainable or nonexistent; US agencies which insisted on proof were deemed "uncooperative"; and there was a large, highly publicized monetary fund available to reward those who made accusations without evidence.
Would we, as Americans, assume the accusations were true, and join in a worldwide chorus condemning U.S. servicemen abroad as monsters of depravity?
No? No?
Hmm. Interesting.
Unfortunately, post #40, which quotes the article, blows that out of the water.
The Catholic church agrees the stuff happened (at least to some extent), but that they didn’t see rapes of children as legal offenses to be admitted to civil authorities, but as something that could be dealt with internally, allowing abusers to ultimately be given more kids to rape.